로그인





연락처 :
bolle1917@gmail.com

http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/47633.htm


Why Does North Korea Hate Us?

By Robert C. Koehler

“The bombing was long, leisurely and merciless . . .”

August 17, 2017 "Information Clearing House" - And so we return to the Korean War, when North Korea was carpet-bombed to the edge of existence. The American media doesn’t have a memory that stretches quite so far back, at least not under present circumstances. One commentator at MSNBC recently explained, for instance, that the tiny pariah nation “has been preparing for war for 63 years.”

That would be since, uh, 1954, the year after the war ended. But the war wasn’t mentioned. It never is. Doing so would disrupt the consensus attitude that Kim Jong-Un is a nuclear-armed crazy and that North Korea’s hatred of the United States is just . . . hatred, dark and bitter, the kind of rancor you’d expect from a communist dictatorship and certified member of the Axis of Evil.

And now Donald Trump is taunting the crazy guy, disrupting the U.S.-maintained normalcy of global relations and putting this country at risk. And that’s almost always the focus: not the use of nuclear weapons per se, but the possibility that a North Korean nuke could reach the United States, as though American lives and “national security” mattered more than, or were separate from, the safety of the whole planet.

Indeed, the concept of national security justifies pretty much every action, however destructive and horrifically consequential in the long term. The concept justifies armed short-sightedness, which equals militarism. Apparently protecting national security also means forgetting the Korean War, or never facing the reality of what we did to North Korea from 1950 to 1953.

But as Trump plays war in his own special way, the time to explore this media memory void is now.

I return to my opening quote, which is from a two-year-old story in the Washington Post: “The bombing was long, leisurely and merciless, even by the assessment of America’s own leaders. ‘Over a period of three years or so, we killed off — what — 20 percent of the population,’ Air Force Gen. Curtis LeMay, head of the Strategic Air Command during the Korean War, told the Office of Air Force History in 1984. Dean Rusk, a supporter of the war and later secretary of state, said the United States bombed ‘everything that moved in North Korea, every brick standing on top of another.’ After running low on urban targets, U.S. bombers destroyed hydroelectric and irrigation dams in the later stages of the war, flooding farmland and destroying crops.”

Specifically, “the U.S. dropped 635,000 tons of explosives on North Korea, including 32,557 tons of napalm, an incendiary liquid that can clear forested areas and cause devastating burns to human skin,” Tom O’Connor wrote recently in Newsweek. This is more bomb tonnage than the U.S. dropped in the Pacific Theater during World War II.

He quoted historian Bruce Cumings: “Most Americans are completely unaware that we destroyed more cities in the North then we did in Japan or Germany during World War II.”

And so we start to open the wound of this war, in which possibly as many as 3 million North Koreans died, a number that would have been even higher had Gen. Douglas MacArthur gotten his way. He proposed nuclear holocaust in the name of national security, figuring he could win the war in ten days.

“Between 30 and 50 atomic bombs would have more than done the job,” he said in an interview shortly after the end of the war. “Dropped under cover of darkness, they would have destroyed the enemy’s air force on the ground, wiped out his maintenance and his airmen.”

 

 
 

“For the Americans, strategic bombing made perfect sense, giving advantage to American technological prowess against the enemy’s numerical superiority,” historian Charles K. Armstrong wrote for the Asia Pacific Journal. “. . . But for the North Koreans, living in fear of B-29 attacks for nearly three years, including the possibility of atomic bombs, the American air war left a deep and lasting impression. The (Democratic People’s Republic of Korea) government never forgot the lesson of North Korea’s vulnerability to American air attack, and for half a century after the Armistice continued to strengthen anti-aircraft defenses, build underground installations, and eventually develop nuclear weapons to ensure that North Korea would not find itself in such a position again. The long-term psychological effect of the war on the whole of North Korean society cannot be overestimated.”

Why is this reality not part of the current news? In what way is American safety furthered by such willful ignorance?

Cumings, writing recently in The Nation, noted that he participated in a forum about North Korea in Seoul last fall with Strobe Talbott, deputy secretary of state in the Bill Clinton administration. At one point, Cumings brought up Robert McNamara’s comment in the documentary The Fog of War, regarding Vietnam, that “we never put ourselves in the shoes of the enemy and attempted to see the world as they did.” Shouldn’t this apply to our negotiations with North Korea?

“Talbott,” Cumings wrote, “then blurted, ‘It’s a grotesque regime!’ There you have it: It’s our number-one problem, but so grotesque that there’s no point trying to understand Pyongyang’s point of view (or even that it might have some valid concerns).”

And so we remain caged in military thinking and the need to win, rather than understand. But as long as we feel no need to understand North Korea, we don’t have to bother trying to understand ourselves. Or face what we have done.

© 2017 Common Wonders

?

List of Articles
번호 제목 글쓴이 날짜 조회 수
268 [스페인/카탈루니아 독립] Defend the Right to Self-Determination and Independence for Catalonia 볼셰비키 2017.10.06 284
267 [그리스] Killing the European Project 볼셰비키 2015.07.14 284
266 [여성/미국] NATO’s Fraudulent War on Behalf of Women 볼셰비키 2018.01.10 283
265 [북한] Can Capitalism Take Off in North Korea? 볼셰비키 2015.04.21 283
264 [그리스] Greece: brilliant success of Syriza's Left Platform at the Central Committee session this week-end! 볼셰비키 2015.03.03 283
263 [중동/팔레스타인] Zionism’s Palestinian Problem…and Ours 볼셰비키 2018.04.10 282
262 [중동/ICL] Down With U.S. War Against ISIS! 볼셰비키 2015.08.29 282
261 [그리스/IMT] The Greek Referendum: Say No to Austerity, Break with capitalism 볼셰비키 2015.07.07 282
260 [쿠바] Fidel Castro and the Right to Be a Marxist-Leninist 볼셰비키 2015.05.12 282
259 [미국] Mumia Abu-Jamal in Medical Crisis 볼셰비키 2015.04.07 282
258 [이란/미국] The impact of Iran sanctions - in charts 볼셰비키 2018.05.23 281
257 [미국/독재정권] US Provides Military Assistance to 73 Percent of the World’s Dictatorships 볼셰비키 2018.04.19 281
256 [시리아] The Real War for Syria is Taking Place in Its Skies 볼셰비키 2018.05.01 280
255 [프랑스] 프랑스 지방선거서 극우정당 대패... 돌풍은 어디로? 볼셰비키 2015.12.14 280
254 [그리스] What Is SYRIZA? 볼셰비키 2015.03.17 280
Board Pagination Prev 1 ... 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 ... 45 Next
/ 45